Wednesday, Nov. 17, is the deadline for the 14 free agents who received a qualifying offer to either accept or reject the one-year, $18.4 million contract. The qualifying offer is set at the average of the top 125 salaries in baseball, and players who accept it return to their team on that one-year deal, and players who reject it are tied to draft pick compensation.
Here are the 14 free agents who received the qualifying offer this year. Only six free agents received it last offseason, and the 14 are the most since a record 20 free agents received the qualifying offer in 2015-16.
1B Brandon Belt, Giants OF Nick Castellanos, Reds OF Michael Conforto, Mets SS Carlos Correa, Astros 1B Freddie Freeman, Braves RHP Raisel Iglesias, Angels LHP Robbie Ray, Blue Jays LHP Eduardo Rodriguez, Red Sox SS Corey Seager, Dodgers IF Marcus Semien, Blue Jays SS Trevor Story, RockiesRHP Noah Syndergaard, Mets UT Chris Taylor, DodgersRHP Justin Verlander, AstrosFree agents who were traded at midseason (like Kris Bryant, Nelson Cruz, and Max Scherzer) are not eligible to receive the qualifying offer, ditto free agents who have received a qualifying offer previously (like Kevin Gausman and Marcus Stroman). If you're curious why a big name free agent didn't receive the qualifying offer, he probably falls into one of those two buckets.
As noted, the deadline to accept or reject the qualifying offer is Wednesday, Nov. 17. Players can -- and have -- make their decision prior to that date, however. Here's an update on players who have already made their qualifying offer decision.
Rejected qualifying offer
After opting out of the final two years and $34 million remaining on his contract, Castellanos has rejected the qualifying offer, reports Bobby Nightengale of the Cincinnati Enquirer. Castellanos was always a lock to reject it. No chance he would opt out of $34 million only to turn around and take the $18.4 million qualifying offer. The Reds will receive a compensation draft pick before the third round if Castellanos signs a deal worth less than $50 million, and a compensation draft pick after the first round if he signs a contract worth $50 million or more. Our R.J. Anderson ranked Castellanos the No. 14 free agent on the market.
Conforto will indeed decline the qualifying offer, according to ESPN's Jeff Passan. He appeared to be a candidate to accept it given his down, injury-interrupted season, but some early offseason canvasing by agent Scott Boras presumably revealed enough interest in Conforto to turn down the qualifying offer. The Mets will receive a compensation draft pick before the third round if Conforto signs a deal worth less than $50 million, and a compensation draft pick after the first round if he signs a contract worth at least $50 million. Our R.J. Anderson ranked Conforto the No. 23 free agent on the market.
As expected, Seager has declined the qualifying offer, reports Jorge Castillo of the Los Angeles Times. Seager has a nine-figure contract coming his way this offseason even while attached to draft pick compensation. Because the Dodgers paid luxury tax this season, they will only receive a compensation draft pick after the fourth round should Seager sign elsewhere, regardless of contract size. Our R.J. Anderson ranked Seager the No. 2 free agent on the market.
Taylor is expected to decline the qualifying offer, reports MLB Network's Jon Heyman. Taylor has reportedly been a popular target early in free agency, which is not a surprise given his offensive production and ability to play just about anywhere on the field. Similar to Seager, the Dodgers will only receive a compensation draft pick after the fourth round should Taylor sign elsewhere regardless of contract size because they paid luxury tax this year. Our R.J. Anderson ranked Taylor the No. 12 free agent on the market.